Conversations With History - Francis Fukuyama

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  • Опубликовано: 5 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 36

  • @TheRacistsMustDie
    @TheRacistsMustDie 12 лет назад +1

    Fukuyama himself actually wrote a very interesting article in Foreign Policy a few weeks ago called "The Future of History" where he lays out how liberal democracy is in a big problem and what elements a new ideology should contain.

  • @Mauday
    @Mauday 13 лет назад +4

    He's a wise man. Even though his "end of history" argument seems a little outdated today.

    • @abrahamdecruz5128
      @abrahamdecruz5128 2 года назад

      Now he bends his end of history to say it was the end of communist history and the collapse of communism and takes credit for his foresight in this. He is more a futurologist these days.

    • @Gigika313
      @Gigika313 2 года назад

      @@abrahamdecruz5128 yet even that isn’t true either

  • @HenryMiller17
    @HenryMiller17 10 лет назад +10

    intro music ... so heavy.

  • @cammorris55
    @cammorris55 11 лет назад

    Great discussion on the new book!

  • @yeasayer
    @yeasayer 12 лет назад

    wow, sounds like his new book develops and is based on a fascinating and insightful history of ideas

    • @abrahamdecruz5128
      @abrahamdecruz5128 2 года назад +1

      He borrows from all subjects like.philosophy, history, biology to support his ideas and theories. Sometimes the pyramid of ideas looks flaky and shaky but he writes very well.

  • @CherryBlossomHill
    @CherryBlossomHill 2 года назад

    Demand for the right of self determination might have been a better choice of words (demand for recognition in current political terms implies identity politics which is largely pejorative).

  • @AndrewStruthers
    @AndrewStruthers 10 лет назад +3

    Damn interesting

  • @mmsa5
    @mmsa5 13 лет назад

    min 20:00- to learn from our biological properties, we could gain a detailed insight into the political features

  • @S2Cents
    @S2Cents 13 лет назад

    @Mauday That's a funny thing to say. His "end of history" argument is a bit outdated. Exactly, I agree he's a respectable fellow. And he now seems to have come out with a book recently that will be of use in the future.

  • @henrix999
    @henrix999 12 лет назад +5

    in two days I will attack his ideas as a part of my exam. easy peasy

    • @cliffgaither
      @cliffgaither 2 года назад

      henrix999 ::
      I hope you passed your exam.

    • @zackkilgore528
      @zackkilgore528 Год назад

      @@cliffgaither probably didnt

  • @spmhall
    @spmhall 13 лет назад

    @RideMyBMW Well, suffice it to say that it would be a very interesting case study to consider! I find it unlikely given the logistical difficulties involved in managing and enforcing those principles, but I concede it might be possible. Would be cool if we could come up with one ;)

  • @caviper1
    @caviper1 12 лет назад

    Does anyone know what is the music at the beginning?

  • @spmhall
    @spmhall 13 лет назад

    @RideMyBMW I feel that you might be at risk of taking institutions for granted yourself given your comment here. One may argure that - given a stipulative definition of legitimacy as being conceived in collective action in support of a political body, institution or set of values - the influence of any of the values adumbrated in the Declaration of Independence is contingent upon those values gaining popular support and societal advocacy.

  • @RideMyBMW
    @RideMyBMW 13 лет назад

    @RideMyBMW 1700s New England?

  • @sbnwnc
    @sbnwnc 11 лет назад

    Is the thesis correct?

  • @suthongsaebe
    @suthongsaebe 10 лет назад +1

    I had this book ,, but ! ,,, I want my money back,,,!

  • @zackkilgore528
    @zackkilgore528 Год назад

    16:14

  • @rebinnader688
    @rebinnader688 11 лет назад

    Conversations With History - Francis Fukuyama

  • @RideMyBMW
    @RideMyBMW 13 лет назад

    min 15:15 "(Americans) take political institutions for granted...we´ve got an anti-status position. We don´t like the government, we dont trust it (...) we dont appreciate the fact that its important to have a state (...) you go to a place like Somalia or Afghanistan, Haiti"
    Hmmm,don´t know about that. According to the Decl of Independence Some institutions come before the State, are older and of greater legitimacy than any government.

  • @sivaponnusamy9381
    @sivaponnusamy9381 Год назад

    Ki

  • @unfad1ng
    @unfad1ng 12 лет назад

    it made much more sense in the 80s

  • @spmhall
    @spmhall 13 лет назад

    @RideMyBMW CONT. This is something that is nigh inconceivable without a strong, central, authoritative body that can institutionalize those values. At the risk of sounding too Hobbesian; name a society - encompassing more than a single or a small set of tribal groups - that succeeded in abiding by the values of the Declaration of Independence without strong institutional backing.

  • @danielkoontz6732
    @danielkoontz6732 3 года назад

    Has a lot of stuff right, but rooted in biology stuff and some other points... He hits so much of this almost pointedly but misses out on the fact that American democracy is able to function because of its foundation in the belief that God is real and the Bible is true. Things like love your neighbor... man he is so close!

  • @RideMyBMW
    @RideMyBMW 13 лет назад

    @spmhall "name a society - encompassing more than a single or a small set of tribal groups - that succeeded in abiding by the values of the Declaration of Independence without strong institutional backing."
    fair enough, if manage to come up with this so called "society" of yours ,what do I get?

  • @RideMyBMW
    @RideMyBMW 13 лет назад

    min 15:15 "(Americans) take political institutions for granted...we´ve got an anti-status position. We don´t like the government, we dont trust it (...) we dont appreciate the fact that its important to have a state (...) you go to a place like Somalia or Afghanistan, Haiti"
    Hmmm,don´t know about that. According to the Decl of Independence Some institutions come before the State, are older and of greater legitimacy than any government.